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Yeah, it pretty much boils down to having 2 options, both of which are workable systems. So we go with status quo.
It might work better for you if you think of it this way. Cost/benefit abilities are usually one special ability with two parts, a cost and a benefit. If you interrupt/negate the ability you interrupt the whole thing, not just the benefit.
ITB does interrupt complete instant abilities if they are causing you to be removed from battle.
So in a cost/effect ability, the cost is not completed until the benefit is gained?
You do not actually ever complete the cost (discard) until the benefit is completed (capture)? If this is true, then that is how we must rule every cost/benefit card. Correct?
Quote from: Minister Polarius on September 06, 2011, 08:29:03 PMITB does interrupt complete instant abilities if they are causing you to be removed from battle.So you are saying that the answer to this question:Quote from: YourMathTeacher on September 06, 2011, 04:09:00 PMSo in a cost/effect ability, the cost is not completed until the benefit is gained?..... is "yes." You do not actually ever complete the cost (discard) until the benefit is completed (capture)? If this is true, then that is how we must rule every cost/benefit card. Correct?
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For example if a card lets you discard a hero to draw a card, but there is a card out that prevents all drawing, then you can still discard the hero (but not draw the card).
I don't see how this is different than an ItB on Egyptian Warden, then. Paying the cost is a completed instant ability. Only the benefit (capture) is being interrupted, just like only the drawing is being prevented in your example.
If the phrasing was "Do this. If you do that, do this other thing," I'd agree with you. In this case, it's one sentence, and in my mind, one ability.
If I have a card that says "Prevent capture abilities" would that prevent me from discarding a card for Egyptian Warden even though the capture is prevented?
Three elders have confirmed the ruling.
No, you can still pay the cost without gaining the benefit.
What's it going to take for this discussion to end?
If I understood why you're not making the connection you know I'd be glad to help you.
And yet, in subsequent discussion it was decided that you can prevent one part without preventing the other. This would seem to indicate that they are separate. Why is prevent ruled differently than interrupt (in regard to cost/benefit)?